For The Stronach Group these days, it’s a whole different
world in Florida. Things couldn’t be brighter. The achievements of TSG at
Gulfstream Park have been extraordinary. Setting new records every winter has
become routine. But what TSG has done with the challenging summer season since
taking it over from Calder has been perhaps its greatest accomplishment.

There have been significant changes to summer racing since
Calder checked out but extra credit to TSG for maintaining a signal
accomplishment of the Calder regime, the Summit of Speed, which renews Saturday.
The series of big-money sprint races was the brainchild of then Calder GM Kenny
Dunn and his creative marketing director Mike Cronin.

At the turn of the millennium, Calder was an off the beaten
track, second tier track once the snowbirds went home. Dunn and Cronin wanted a
way to remind the industry, “Hey, we’re still here.” Eradicating the image of a
hot, sweaty, unbearable place during the summer (not totally unmerited) was the
biggest obstacle.

Through dogged perseverance and calling in favors from their
many friends, Dunn, Cronin and their beloved racing secretary, the late Bobby
Umphrey, who has a stakes named for him Saturday, managed to cajole a few big
horses south for the early runnings.

Those who came realized it really wasn’t so bad, in a
big way laying the foundation for what Calder and now Gulfstream became.
Besides, there was big money to be made and reputations to be enhanced.

D. Wayne Lukas started sending down horses. So did his most
successful protege, Todd Pletcher. Bill Mott and Steve Asmussen have shipped in
stable stars. Even Bob Baffert has been attracted from California.

Eventual Eclipse Sprint Champions Lost in the Fog,
Orientate, Benny the Bull and Big Drama burnished their credentials with Summit
of Speed victories. Gradually, the Summit became a major stop on the racing
calendar for one-turn horses.

The Graded Stakes Committee took notice. The Princess Rooney
was made a Grade 1 (recently unfairly demoted to Grade 2) and the Smile Sprint
is a Grade 2. Breeders’ Cup made the Princess Rooney a win-and-you’re-in event.

In the beginning local horsemen were annoyed that the
out-of-town star trainers were taking big money that could have enhanced
regular purses. To their credit, instead of doing anything to undermine the
event, they took the sensible route. They pointed the best of what they had to
defend the home turf (and dirt).

Saturday’s renewal will feature some stellar shippers. Mike
Stidham is bringing in Saguro Row for the Princess Rooney and Proforma for the
Smile. But locally-based horses are the morning line favorites in both stakes.

Long-time Florida regular Kathleen O’Connell could have the
kind of day Chad Brown often has in New York. O’Connell has the early favorites
in three of the stakes.

Story Embrace, winner of the 2018 Princess Rooney, is 4-5 to
defend her title against six rivals. She’s coming off a 10 ½ length romp in the
Musical Embrace, the same prep she used last year. That race was validated when
Lady’s Island, who ran second, returned to win the Nicole’s Dream by 9.

Jalen Journey, on a three-race winning streak, is the early
9-5 choice in the Smile. Vying for favoritism with him is Garters and Ties, who
has been knocking heads for the past two years with the best of his generation and
won his last by more than 10. Another streaker, who will have substantial
backing is Royal Squeeze, 4-for-4 since being claimed by newcomer Elizabeth
Robles, who’s hitting at only a 34% clip.

Grade 3 Sam F. Davis winner Well Defined returns to the races
for the first time since the Tampa Bay Derby as the favorite in the Carry Back.

Top to bottom, the 14-race, five-stakes Summit card will
arguably be the best racing program in the nation this weekend.

Santa Anita Closes But Tough Times Continue

Belinda Stronach truly loves horses. If she did not run The Stronach
Group tracks, I could easily see her as a member of PETA or some other animal
rights groups. This has led her to make some horrendous decisions in haste.

Most notable was getting into bed with PETA’s Kathy
Guillermo, the Tokyo Rose of horse racing. Guillermo sweet talked Stronach into
believing they shared the same goal, the protection of horses. Guillermo’s
means to that end, of course, is ending racing. She initially denied this but
since has revealed her true purpose.

This past weekend, Stronach made another bad call on the
spur of the moment. Less than 24 hours after CNN did a sensational “expose” on
the tragic horse deaths at Santa Anita, which was especially harsh on Jerry
Hollendorfer, she ruled the Hall of Fame trainer off the grounds and said he
could no longer stable, train or enter horses at TSG tracks.

Hollendorfer appears to be a victim of a circumstantial
numbers game. Four horses under his care, the most of any trainer, are among
the 30 who have perished since the end of December. Nowhere in Santa Anita’s
ruling or post-mortems by inquiring minds has any specific infraction been
alleged.

Last week I made a comment on how California officials have
a Pontius Pilate attitude. In other words, throw someone to the bellowing mob
in the hope it will shut them up for a while. Alas, Stronach now belongs in
this category.

The numbers are distressing but Bob Baffert had seven horses
under his care die under mysterious circumstances within 17 months in
2011-2013. No penalty was assessed. Baffert was given a hearing and cleared
himself to the satisfaction of the California Horse Racing Board.

Hollendorfer has not gotten any such consideration. Out of
the blue, he was told, “You’re out of here!” They didn’t even bother to plant
incriminating evidence, as a New York State investigator allegedly did to Rick
Dutrow.

As un-American as this might seem, race tracks have the
absolute right to decide who they want on their grounds and in their entries.
The only exceptions would be exclusions based on gender, race or ethnicity.
Hollendorfer has the misfortune of being a white male.

Speaking of Dutrow, it’s significant that NYRA, the catalyst
for Dutrow’s 10-year suspension, and which had to endure a similar spate of
horse deaths in 2015, has told Hollendorfer he is welcome at its tracks. It’s
beyond doubt NYRA performed an abundance of due diligence given the
circumstances under which Hollendorfer was told to vacate Santa Anita.

Hollendorfer also got a vote of confidence from Edward
Allred, who said Hollendorfer is welcome at his track. “Los Alamitos will
gladly provide stalls to Jerry Hollendorfer. Unless forbidden by the CHRB, we
intend to permit entries from Hollendorfer. We do not feel he should be a
scapegoat for a problem which derives from a number of factors.”

The latter point is significant. Santa Anita has no idea
what caused the inordinate number of equine fatalities, only theories. However,
through its treatment of Hollendorfer it is essentially saying he is a big part
of the problem.

With Stronach making arbitrary decisions, which could end a horsemen’s career, and the California Horse Racing Board now having the ability to shut down racing without advance notice, California racing continues to hasten its own demise.

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Our staff likes nothing better than to engage with the HRI Faithful and provide a forum for interaction on horseracing and sports. In that spirit, please be kind and reasonable; keep the language clean, and the tone civil. Comments from those who cannot comply will be deleted. Thank you.

Thanks. We worked hard on the site and we’re still tweaking some elements.
Fixed odds are available from Wm. Hill in NJ and will come to other states as laws are changed in each. Some may not.
I guess you’ve all seen the Breeders’ Cup board is keeping the event at Santa Anita.

I agree with TJ that the BC made a mistake. Now that the meet can be cancelled, PETA could wind up holding the paddles to the canoe. Worse, a BC breakdown this year could close Santa Anita forever. If ever slow and cautious should be the watchwords … Prove the reviews work and the track is safe first!

While I believe that Bob Baffert should have been suspended and scrutinized at least as soon as the third sudden death in his barn, I don’t see the events as comparable. It was Hollywood Park management then, not TSG, that took no action against Baffert.

Jerry Hollendorfer’s “stellar” career statistics were accumulated while dominating third-class race meetings; boosting Russell Baze’s total wins record against a jockey colony in NoCal that didn’t embarrass him like that in SoCal. Like few others before him, JH ruled his roost with impunity. How is that ever possible without an edge of some sort?

His two most highly regarded trainees, champions Songbird and Shared Belief, both ended careers with physical problems. There must be a reason why trainers of top horses are generally able to resist the Charles Town Classic purse (though Baffert tried twice with Game On Dude). IMO there was smoke surrounding JH even before Santa Anita.

I didn’t like the way the JH situation was handled by TSG, but that’s what courts are for. What I hope happens is that by the time Santa Anita reopens, JH’s record subsequent record shows that he is no threat to racing in CA.

As far as I’m concerned, CD is no safer than SA, and should be required to adopt the review process if it wants the BC. If BC Ltd is indeed a believer in the reviews, what could be more responsible?

In no way did I mean Hollendorfer was being picked on because he is a white male. I was merely stating the obvious. Tracks cannot discriminate on the basis of race, gender, ethnicity, etc., and he didn’t qualify on any of these. If he did, it would have been harder, if not impossible, to single him out.

I have no doubt that he has taken edges along the way. This is true of most trainers with big winning percentages. But until there is a better explanation for his banishmentn, I consider him a scapegoat.

Howard, TJ and I differ politically by about 180 degrees, but that hasn’t negated our friendship of 48 years. But even if that were not the case, nothing I read in his piece would have me infer that any discrimination was involved in JH getting ruled off.

The fact is most tracks are private property and as such can banish anyone for whatever reason they wish, fairly or unfairly.

How else does one read the misfortune of being a white male? Doesn’t take a genius to know exactly what is being inferred here. As far as the ban the fact Baffert wasn’t shouldn’t impact one way or the other. I think they dropped ball by not coming down on Baffert and others too but again no defense. The fact that some criminals get away with it doesn’t mean we should stop arresting everyone.

Howard, I will give you that it was an unfortunate turn of phrase in an era of hyper-correctness. I admit I winced a little but I know the man and never would I think he would go there purposefully.

In fact, if he truly meant it that way, I think he would have gone out of his way not to say anything inflammatory that might hurt HRI.

Regulars know that Tom can write biting commentary. But as executive editor, I must take the hit here. And I will be a little more aware of possible “inferences” in the future. But you, too, are a reasonable man, Howard. Thank you for bringing this to my attention. Truly…

Irony? We have a guy in the white house who can say whatever he wants about whomever and can grab women by the well you know, but using the term ‘white male’ in this context is some how politically incorrect? Tom keep up the biting commentary.